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Topic: 4K 15 FPS (Read 6303 times)

is 15 fps in 4K worth anything? or will it be all choppy? looking at the gopro3 and thats the top resolution for video.i am just thinking cropping that down to 1080P would get rid of some of the fish eye factor that these cameras display. the other option is 2.7K at 30 fps.

is 15 fps in 4K worth anything? or will it be all choppy? looking at the gopro3 and thats the top resolution for video.i am just thinking cropping that down to 1080P would get rid of some of the fish eye factor that these cameras display. the other option is 2.7K at 30 fps.

24 isn't choppy, its the most normal looking to the eye. 60fps viewed on a screen with a high enough refresh rate looks more fluid like a home video... almost looks worse. That's subjective though I guess. Most productions are filmed at double the FPS the final product will use, so that they have the freedom to do slow-mo without loss.

4K at 15 fps is pointless. It's a spec acheived purely for marketing benefit if you ask me. And even if it got 4K at 24fps, with the IQ of the GoPro, you'd be better off scaling up the resolution of DSLR video taken at 720p. Id be willing to bet the IQ will still be as good or better.

is 15 fps in 4K worth anything? or will it be all choppy? looking at the gopro3 and thats the top resolution for video.i am just thinking cropping that down to 1080P would get rid of some of the fish eye factor that these cameras display. the other option is 2.7K at 30 fps.

I just did a quick search on youtube, this is 4k at 12fps downscaled to 1080p

thanks for the link, but wow that looks horrid, not just the fisheye effect but it really does look choppy (esp the beginning with cars going across the screen).It might have some 'artistic' uses, like a lensbaby, pinhole, or expired film, if you're into that. But i wouldn't buy one expecting it to be any good.

I just did a quick search on youtube, this is 4k at 12fps downscaled to 1080p

thanks for the link, but wow that looks horrid, not just the fisheye effect but it really does look choppy (esp the beginning with cars going across the screen).It might have some 'artistic' uses, like a lensbaby, pinhole, or expired film, if you're into that. But i wouldn't buy one expecting it to be any good.

The choppyness is a problem, but because the frame rates are customisable it is more suited to timelapses etc where you then conform the video to playback at a smooth frame rate. The 2.7k setting is very nice, I just wish i was getting one. Also the 720p at 120fps is a very good feature allowing really good slo mo, would be worth it for that as well as the versatility and size of the camera

I don't think that's what people are wondering about, it's that this particular feature doesn't seem to have any feasible application. If you want to do a timelapse, there's a feature on the camera specifically for that. The 4k framerate is too low to do anything with, and nobody I know can actually view native 4k anyhow.

It may be an option for people that want to set it up at an event on a tripod and pull stills from it? 4k is about the resolution point where I'd be thinking it's nice to have wide-angle stills that record a 'strategic angle' or position at an event. Especially if it's an angle or position that I won't have the chance to go near very often. (If that makes sense?)